Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Why Kids Bully: Because They're Popular

By  Tuesday, February 8, 2011


- All Sociology students need to respond to this article!


The text in red below are links to other articles you may want to read before responding

Mean kids, mothers tell their wounded young, behave that way because they have unhappy home lives, or feel inadequate, or don't have enough friends or because they somehow lack empathy. But a new study suggests some mean kids actually behave that way simply because they can.

Contrary to accepted ruffian-scholarship, the more popular a middle- or high-school kid becomes, the more central to the social network of the school, the more aggressive the behavior he or she engages in. At least, that was the case in North Carolina, where students from 19 middle and high schools were studied for 4.5 years by researchers at the University of California-Davis.

Authors Robert Faris and Diane Felmlee interviewed public-school kids seven times over the course of their study, starting when the students were in grades 6, 7 and 8. They asked the students to name their friends and used the data to create friendship maps. They then asked the kids who was unkind to them and whom they picked on, and mapped out the pathways of aggression.

 (More on Time.com: The Tricky Politics of Tween Bullying)

What they found was that only one-third of the students engaged in any bullying at all — physical force, taunts or gossip-spreading — but those who were moving up the school popularity chain bullied more as they went higher. Only when kids reached the very top 2% of the school's social hierarchy or fell into the bottom 2% did their behavior change; these kids were the least aggressive.

"Seemingly normal well-adjusted kids can be aggressive," says Faris, whose results are published in the new issue of the American Sociological Review. "We found that status increases aggression."

While the authors are not ruling out psychological or background influences as underlying causes of the bullying, they believe that popularity is at least as important. "It's one of the few times I can recall in social sciences where race and family background seem to make very little difference," says Faris. "Those demographic and socioeconomic factors don't seem to matter as much as where the kids are in the school hierarchy."

(More on Time.com: A Glimmer of Hope in a Bad-News Survey About Bullying)

Faris also found that the more kids cared about popularity, the more aggressive they were. Ironically, that's pointless; hostile behavior did not cause rises in status. "The evidence suggests that overall aggression does not increase status," he says. Then again, it's not whether it works that's important. It's whether the kids believe it works.

Another stereotype the study jabbed at was that males and females bully differently. Boys spread gossip only marginally less often than girls did. And girls were negligibly less physically violent to each other than boys were. Gender-on-gender bullying was more prevalent among girls than boys, but boys were more likely to be hostile toward girls than the other way around.

Gender wasn't entirely a neutral factor, however. If a girl knew a lot of boys, or a boy knew a lot of girls at a school where there wasn't much intermingling of the sexes, those kids' status would go up, presumably because they provided a bridge to contact with potential dates. And, yep, the "gender-bridge" kids, as the study called them, seemed to be more aggressive than others.

If bullying is actually more of a result of hierarchy than of psychology, Faris believes there might be a more effective solution than trying to change the behavior of the bullies. "The majority of kids who witness this, either give it tacit approval or outright encouragement," says Faris. "Those are the ones who give these kids their status. We need to change their minds."

11 comments:

  1. What about those kids who are getting cyber-bullied? Maybe the kids who are getting bullied need to find a friend who'll stand up for them, or stand up for themselves. I had to learn to do that pretty quick when I switched to Litchfield in 5th grade.

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  2. I agree with this article one hundred percent because you even see this type of behavior in our school which is super small compared to these other big schools. Its actually sad to think about because being popular just happens when you grow up in your friends. Every type of group has that type of popular person.

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  3. I agree with this article. These types of bullies are much more common, I feel, than the kids who live a hard home life.

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  4. This was a really good article, mainly because most of the behaviors they described I've personally seen around school. I agree with the statement that the more popular kids bully more because they can, and the more "liked" they are, the worse it gets. If they get to the point where teachers start to really like them, their behavior gets worse.

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  5. I agree with this article. If you look around in our halls and lunch room you can see who hangs out with who. There is many different groups, and everyone is looking to get into a certain group. It doesn't matter to some people if they put down another person they just want to become more popular.

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  6. I agree with the article. Their are different groups and cliques that people form and everyone is looking to be the leader or the most popular, often times bullying others to be the most popular.

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    1. Right, they put other people down so that they seem to be "above" them.

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  7. I think this article is very accurate, bullying has more to to with your social status than psychological or demographic factors. I also believe its true that may kids bully just because they can.

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  8. Kids who are considered popular became popular because of the culture that surrounds them. Here if you wrestle, play football, or listen to the fad music this gives you popularity. Because they can gain such a social status, even branching to officials in school, They gain immunity in the school to a point.

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  9. I agree, popular kids probably do the most bullying to try and prove that they are better than someone else. Everybody has there own group of people they hang around. And teachers cant see or hear verbal bullying because kids who are verbally bullied dont want to get made fun of for telling on someone.

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    1. I think a lot of times teachers can see the bullying and if they can not see it; they still know it is happening. Sometimes I think teachers will even pick a side and join in, but that all kind of leads back to what you consider to be bullying.

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